scrivener 1.0.0 → 1.1.0
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- checksums.yaml +5 -5
- data/CONTRIBUTING +19 -0
- data/LICENSE +1 -1
- data/README.md +129 -105
- data/lib/scrivener.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/scrivener/validations.rb +3 -3
- data/test/scrivener_test.rb +63 -27
- metadata +10 -9
checksums.yaml
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metadata.gz:
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metadata.gz: cbe35ddb7f28d6cbee5d7f31731af970cef677060f6428f4aec67da1ec11ab11e6f78edb3aee2dfda56b4a950cf9e16a2a6326eb65e5119d3e4fb1bbd615396a
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data.tar.gz: 45e428e8d5204f8493199d020bd5af06fd857cfa42b67aac4b03e078b23db7a47bce1ed7588621198ad5fb797f102aab1178cc7245444a25bdd2cc446ba51f51
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data/CONTRIBUTING
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This code tries to solve a particular problem with a very simple
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implementation. We try to keep the code to a minimum while making
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it as clear as possible. The design is very likely finished, and
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if some feature is missing it is possible that it was left out on
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purpose. That said, new usage patterns may arise, and when that
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happens we are ready to adapt if necessary.
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A good first step for contributing is to meet us on IRC and discuss
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ideas. We spend a lot of time on #lesscode at freenode, always ready
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to talk about code and simplicity. If connecting to IRC is not an
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option, you can create an issue explaining the proposed change and
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a use case. We pay a lot of attention to use cases, because our
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goal is to keep the code base simple. Usually the result of a
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conversation is the creation of a different tool.
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Please don't start the conversation with a pull request. The code
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should come at last, and even though it may help to convey an idea,
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more often than not it draws the attention to a particular
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implementation.
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data/LICENSE
CHANGED
data/README.md
CHANGED
@@ -6,81 +6,18 @@ Validation frontend for models.
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Description
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-----------
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Scrivener removes the validation responsibility from models and
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filter for whitelisted attributes.
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-
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the set of validations for a User in a Sign up process may not be the same
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as the one exposed to an Admin when editing a user profile. While you want
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the User to provide an email, a password and a password confirmation, you
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probably don't want the admin to mess with those attributes at all.
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-
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In a wizard, different model states ask for different validations, and a single
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set of validations for the whole process is not the best solution.
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-
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Scrivener is Bureaucrat's little brother. It draws all the inspiration from it
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and its features are a subset of Bureaucrat's. For a more robust and tested
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solution, please [check it](https://github.com/tizoc/bureaucrat).
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-
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This library exists to satify the need of extracting Ohm's validations for
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reuse in other scenarios.
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Scrivener removes the validation responsibility from models and
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acts as a filter for whitelisted attributes. Read about the
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[motivation](#motivation) to understand why this separation of
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concerns is important.
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Usage
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-----
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-
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using. As it provides its own validation and whitelisting features, you can
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choose to ignore the ones that come bundled with ORMs.
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-
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This short example illustrates how to move the validation and whitelisting
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responsibilities away from the model and into Scrivener:
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A very basic example would be creating a blog post:
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```ruby
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-
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# as Ohm or ActiveRecord.
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class Article < Sequel::Model
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# Whitelist for mass assigned attributes.
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set_allowed_columns :title, :body, :state
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# Validations for all contexts.
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def validate
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validates_presence :title
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validates_presence :body
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validates_presence :state
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end
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end
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title = "Bartleby, the Scrivener"
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body = "I am a rather elderly man..."
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# When using the model...
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article = Article.new(title: title, body: body)
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article.valid? #=> false
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article.errors[:state] #=> [:not_present]
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```
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Of course, what you would do instead is declare `:title` and `:body` as allowed
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columns, then assign `:state` using the attribute accessor. The reason for this
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example is to show how you need to work around the fact that there's a single
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declaration for allowed columns and validations, which in many cases is a great
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feature and in others is a minor obstacle.
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Now see what happens with Scrivener:
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```ruby
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# Now the model has no validations or whitelists. It may still have schema
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# constraints, which is a good practice to enforce data integrity.
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class Article < Sequel::Model
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end
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# The attribute accessors are the only fields that will be set. If more
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# fields are sent when using mass assignment, a NoMethodError exception is
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# raised.
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#
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# Note how in this example we don't accept the status attribute.
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class Edit < Scrivener
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class CreateBlogPost < Scrivener
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attr_accessor :title
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attr_accessor :body
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@@ -89,40 +26,42 @@ class Edit < Scrivener
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assert_present :body
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end
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end
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```
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article = Article.new(edit.attributes)
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article.save
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# And now we only ask for the status.
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class Publish < Scrivener
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attr_accessor :status
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In order to use it, you have to create an instance of `CreateBlogPost`
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by passing a hash with the attributes `title` and `body` and their
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corresponding values:
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-
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-
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-
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```ruby
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params = {
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title: "Bartleby",
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body: "I am a rather elderly man..."
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}
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filter = CreateBlogPost.new(params)
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```
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-
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Now you can run the validations by calling `filter.valid?`, and you
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can retrieve the attributes by calling `filter.attributes`. If the
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validation fails, a hash of attributes and error codes will be
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available by calling `filter.errors`. For example:
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-
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-
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```ruby
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if filter.valid?
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puts filter.attributes
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else
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puts filter.errors
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end
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```
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-
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-
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For now, we are just printing the attributes and the list of errors,
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but often you will use the attributes to create an instance of a
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model, and you will display the error messages in a view.
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you can fetch just the ones you need. For example:
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Let's consider the case of creating a new user:
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```ruby
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class
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class CreateUser < Scrivener
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attr_accessor :email
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attr_accessor :password
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attr_accessor :password_confirmation
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@@ -135,33 +74,75 @@ class SignUp < Scrivener
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end
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end
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end
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```
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The filter looks very similar, but as you can see the validations
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return booleans, thus they can be nested. In this example, we don't
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want to bother asserting if the password and the password confirmation
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are equal if the password was not provided.
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Let's instantiate the filter:
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```ruby
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params = {
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email: "info@example.com",
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password: "monkey",
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password_confirmation: "monkey"
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}
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filter =
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password_confirmation: "monkey")
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filter = CreateUser.new(params)
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```
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If the validation succeeds, we only need email and password to
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create a new user, and we can discard the password_confirmation.
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The `filter.slice` method receives a list of attributes and returns
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the attributes hash with any other attributes removed. In this
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example, the hash returned by `filter.slice` will contain only the
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`email` and `password` fields:
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-
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# create a new user, and we can discard the password_confirmation.
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```ruby
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if filter.valid?
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User.create(filter.slice(:email, :password))
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end
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```
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-
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-
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Sometimes we might want to use parameters from the outside for validation,
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but don't want the validator to treat them as attributes. In that case we
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can pass arguments to `#valid?`, and they will be forwarded to `#validate`.
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```ruby
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class CreateComment < Scrivener
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attr_accessor :content
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attr_accessor :article_id
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def validate(available_articles:)
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assert_present :content
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assert_member :article_id, available_articles.map(&:id)
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end
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end
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```
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```ruby
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params = {
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content: "this is a comment",
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article_id: 57,
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}
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filter = CreateComment.new(params)
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filter.valid?(available_articles: user.articles)
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```
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Assertions
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-----------
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Scrivener ships with some basic assertions.
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for each of them:
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Scrivener ships with some basic assertions.
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### assert
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The `assert` method is used by all the other assertions. It pushes the
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second parameter to the list of errors if the first parameter evaluates
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to false
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to `false` or `nil`.
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``` ruby
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def assert(value, error)
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end
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```
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New assertions can be built upon existing ones. For example, let's
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define an assertion for positive numbers:
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```ruby
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def assert_positive(att, error = [att, :not_positive])
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assert(send(att) > 0, error)
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end
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```
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This assertion calls `assert` and passes both the result of evaluating
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`send(att) > 0` and the array with the attribute and the error code.
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All assertions respect this API.
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### assert_present
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Checks that the given field is not nil or empty. The error code for
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assertion is `:not_present`.
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Checks that the given field is not nil or empty. The error code for
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this assertion is `:not_present`.
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### assert_equal
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@@ -237,6 +231,36 @@ of the word. Valid numbers are: 0.1, .1, 1, 1.1, 3.14159, etc.
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The error code for this assertion is `:not_decimal`.
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Motivation
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----------
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+
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A model may expose different APIs to satisfy different purposes.
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+
For example, the set of validations for a User in a sign up process
|
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+
may not be the same as the one exposed to an Admin when editing a
|
240
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+
user profile. While you want the User to provide an email, a password
|
241
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+
and a password confirmation, you probably don't want the admin to
|
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+
mess with those attributes at all.
|
243
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+
|
244
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+
In a wizard, different model states ask for different validations,
|
245
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+
and a single set of validations for the whole process is not the
|
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+
best solution.
|
247
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+
|
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+
This library exists to satisfy the need for extracting
|
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[Ohm](http://ohm.keyvalue.org)'s validations for reuse in other
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scenarios.
|
251
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+
|
252
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+
Using Scrivener feels very natural no matter what underlying model
|
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you are using. As it provides its own validation and whitelisting
|
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features, you can choose to ignore those that come bundled with
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ORMs.
|
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+
|
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See also
|
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+
--------
|
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+
|
260
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Scrivener is [Bureaucrat](https://github.com/tizoc/bureaucrat)'s
|
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little brother. It draws all the inspiration from it and its features
|
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+
are a subset of Bureaucrat's.
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+
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Installation
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241
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------------
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data/lib/scrivener.rb
CHANGED
@@ -67,14 +67,14 @@ class Scrivener
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67
67
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# end
|
68
68
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# end
|
69
69
|
#
|
70
|
-
def valid?
|
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+
def valid?(*args)
|
71
71
|
errors.clear
|
72
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-
validate
|
72
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+
validate(*args)
|
73
73
|
errors.empty?
|
74
74
|
end
|
75
75
|
|
76
76
|
# Base validate implementation. Override this method in subclasses.
|
77
|
-
def validate
|
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+
def validate(*args)
|
78
78
|
end
|
79
79
|
|
80
80
|
# Hash of errors for each attribute in this model.
|
data/test/scrivener_test.rb
CHANGED
@@ -207,61 +207,97 @@ end
|
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207
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|
208
208
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class H < Scrivener
|
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209
|
attr_accessor :a
|
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attr_accessor :b
|
210
211
|
|
211
212
|
def validate
|
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|
-
|
213
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+
assert_equal :a, "foo"
|
214
|
+
assert_equal :b, Integer
|
213
215
|
end
|
214
216
|
end
|
215
217
|
|
216
218
|
scope do
|
217
|
-
test "
|
219
|
+
test "equality validation" do
|
218
220
|
filter = H.new({})
|
219
221
|
|
220
222
|
assert ! filter.valid?
|
221
|
-
assert filter.errors[:a].include?(:
|
223
|
+
assert filter.errors[:a].include?(:not_equal)
|
224
|
+
assert filter.errors[:b].include?(:not_equal)
|
222
225
|
|
223
|
-
filter = H.new(a: "
|
226
|
+
filter = H.new(a: "foo", b: "bar")
|
224
227
|
assert ! filter.valid?
|
225
|
-
assert filter.errors[:a].include?(:not_in_range)
|
226
228
|
|
227
|
-
filter = H.new(a: "
|
229
|
+
filter = H.new(a: "foo")
|
228
230
|
assert ! filter.valid?
|
229
|
-
assert filter.errors[:a].
|
231
|
+
assert filter.errors[:a].empty?
|
232
|
+
assert filter.errors[:b].include?(:not_equal)
|
230
233
|
|
231
|
-
filter = H.new(a: "foo")
|
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|
+
filter = H.new(a: "foo", b: 42)
|
235
|
+
filter.valid?
|
232
236
|
assert filter.valid?
|
233
237
|
end
|
234
238
|
end
|
235
239
|
|
236
|
-
class
|
237
|
-
|
238
|
-
|
240
|
+
class Scrivener
|
241
|
+
def assert_filter(att, filter, error = nil)
|
242
|
+
filter = filter.new(send(att))
|
243
|
+
|
244
|
+
unless filter.valid?
|
245
|
+
assert(false, error || [att, filter.errors])
|
246
|
+
end
|
247
|
+
end
|
248
|
+
end
|
239
249
|
|
250
|
+
class I < Scrivener
|
251
|
+
attr_accessor :name
|
252
|
+
|
240
253
|
def validate
|
241
|
-
assert_equal :
|
242
|
-
assert_equal :b, Fixnum
|
254
|
+
assert_equal :name, "I"
|
243
255
|
end
|
244
256
|
end
|
245
257
|
|
258
|
+
class J < Scrivener
|
259
|
+
attr_accessor :name
|
260
|
+
attr_accessor :i
|
261
|
+
|
262
|
+
def validate
|
263
|
+
assert_equal :name, "J"
|
264
|
+
assert_filter :i, I
|
265
|
+
end
|
266
|
+
end
|
246
267
|
|
247
268
|
scope do
|
248
|
-
test "
|
249
|
-
|
269
|
+
test "nested filters" do
|
270
|
+
j1 = J.new(name: "J", i: { name: "I" })
|
271
|
+
j2 = J.new(name: "J", i: { name: "H" })
|
250
272
|
|
251
|
-
|
252
|
-
|
253
|
-
assert filter.errors[:b].include?(:not_equal)
|
273
|
+
assert_equal true, j1.valid?
|
274
|
+
assert_equal false, j2.valid?
|
254
275
|
|
255
|
-
|
256
|
-
|
276
|
+
errors = {
|
277
|
+
i: [{ name: [:not_equal] }]
|
278
|
+
}
|
257
279
|
|
258
|
-
|
259
|
-
|
260
|
-
|
261
|
-
assert filter.errors[:b].include?(:not_equal)
|
280
|
+
assert_equal errors, j2.errors
|
281
|
+
end
|
282
|
+
end
|
262
283
|
|
263
|
-
|
264
|
-
|
265
|
-
assert
|
284
|
+
class K < Scrivener
|
285
|
+
def validate(argument)
|
286
|
+
assert argument == "K", [:k, :not_valid]
|
287
|
+
end
|
288
|
+
end
|
289
|
+
|
290
|
+
scope do
|
291
|
+
test "passing arguments" do
|
292
|
+
k = K.new({})
|
293
|
+
|
294
|
+
assert_equal true, k.valid?("K")
|
295
|
+
assert_equal false, k.valid?("L")
|
296
|
+
|
297
|
+
errors = {
|
298
|
+
k: [:not_valid]
|
299
|
+
}
|
300
|
+
|
301
|
+
assert_equal errors, k.errors
|
266
302
|
end
|
267
303
|
end
|
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,27 +1,27 @@
|
|
1
1
|
--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
2
2
|
name: scrivener
|
3
3
|
version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
4
|
-
version: 1.
|
4
|
+
version: 1.1.0
|
5
5
|
platform: ruby
|
6
6
|
authors:
|
7
7
|
- Michel Martens
|
8
8
|
autorequire:
|
9
9
|
bindir: bin
|
10
10
|
cert_chain: []
|
11
|
-
date:
|
11
|
+
date: 2018-11-13 00:00:00.000000000 Z
|
12
12
|
dependencies:
|
13
13
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
14
14
|
name: cutest
|
15
15
|
requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
16
16
|
requirements:
|
17
|
-
- -
|
17
|
+
- - ">="
|
18
18
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
19
19
|
version: '0'
|
20
20
|
type: :development
|
21
21
|
prerelease: false
|
22
22
|
version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
23
23
|
requirements:
|
24
|
-
- -
|
24
|
+
- - ">="
|
25
25
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
26
26
|
version: '0'
|
27
27
|
description: Scrivener removes the validation responsibility from models and acts
|
@@ -32,10 +32,11 @@ executables: []
|
|
32
32
|
extensions: []
|
33
33
|
extra_rdoc_files: []
|
34
34
|
files:
|
35
|
-
- .gems
|
36
|
-
- .gitignore
|
35
|
+
- ".gems"
|
36
|
+
- ".gitignore"
|
37
37
|
- AUTHORS
|
38
38
|
- CHANGELOG.md
|
39
|
+
- CONTRIBUTING
|
39
40
|
- LICENSE
|
40
41
|
- README.md
|
41
42
|
- lib/scrivener.rb
|
@@ -53,17 +54,17 @@ require_paths:
|
|
53
54
|
- lib
|
54
55
|
required_ruby_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
55
56
|
requirements:
|
56
|
-
- -
|
57
|
+
- - ">="
|
57
58
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
58
59
|
version: '0'
|
59
60
|
required_rubygems_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
60
61
|
requirements:
|
61
|
-
- -
|
62
|
+
- - ">="
|
62
63
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
63
64
|
version: '0'
|
64
65
|
requirements: []
|
65
66
|
rubyforge_project:
|
66
|
-
rubygems_version: 2.
|
67
|
+
rubygems_version: 2.7.6
|
67
68
|
signing_key:
|
68
69
|
specification_version: 4
|
69
70
|
summary: Validation frontend for models.
|